South Florida Sun-Sentinel Palm Beach (Sunday)

Immigrants finally welcomed on TV

‘Never Have I Ever,’ ‘Vida’ epitomes of new wave of shows

- By Neal Justin

Randall Park grew up watching reruns of the TV western “Bonanza.” But what he saw left him confused.

“You think of yourself as a Cartwright and then realize that everyone sees you as a Hop Sing,” the actor says in the five-hour documentar­y “Asian Americans,” which examines the challenges that have faced the country’s fastest-growing racial group over the past century.

Park, one of dozens who were interviewe­d for the documentar­y on PBS, went on to star in ABC’s “Fresh Off the Boat,” a sitcom that helped usher in a new wave of TV shows in which immigrants finally ride high in the saddle.

One-note bandleader Ricky Ricardo from “I Love Lucy” has been outplayed by scene-stealing Cuban American grandmothe­r Lydia on the new “One Day at a Time,” who boasts of her U.S. citizenshi­p while insisting her family not forget its roots. Kwik-EMart proprietor Apu from “The Simpsons” has been lapped by Devi, the Indian American teenager in Netflix’s “Never Have I Ever,” who grumbles about wearing a sari but prays to the Hindu gods.

The 1970s sitcom “Chico and the Man” may have targeted bigots, but it still hung onto cliches, like having Freddie Prinze’s fatherless character mangle the English language and depend financiall­y on a white man. In 2020, the taco shop on Netflix’s “Gentefied” may not rake in big bucks, but at least its Mexican American owners are calling their own shots.

“I didn’t grow up with a half-hour comedy about a Middle Eastern family.

Most of the Middle Easterners I saw on TV were actively working against Jack Bauer on ‘24,’ ” said “Saturday Night Live” veteran Nasim Pedrad, who plays a Persian American boy trying to navigate high school in an upcoming TBS series. “What’s exciting for me is creating something with humanity and depth. The only thing worse than no representa­tion is a sweatier, contrived attempt at it.”

These new-generation characters are multidimen­sional and often conflicted, trying to honor their heritage while striving to be all-American. In short, they’re real.

In Netflix’s “Master of None,” Aziz Ansari’s Dev Shah respects his parents’ strict Muslim practices but sneaks out to attend a barbecue festival. The protagonis­t of “Ramy,” which returns to Hulu for a second season May 29, faithfully attends mosque but isn’t opposed to one-night stands.

“What does it feel like when you want to go to Mecca and you also want to go to Burning Man?” said creator and star Ramy Youssef, who won a Golden Globe for his performanc­e this year. “I had never seen that played out before.”

Many of these series strive to humanize the marginaliz­ed. But some viewers will also see them as Hollywood’s response to those who want to reduce immigratio­n. That’s a fair assumption since these shows often were hatched during the debate over building a wall between Mexico and the U.S., the start of a crackdown on undocument­ed citizens and a string of hate crimes.

David Simon, best known for “The Wire,” originally passed on doing a TV version of Philip Roth’s novel “The Plot Against America,” which reimagined a world in which the United States didn’t enter World War II, triggering a rash of anti-Semitism in an alternate history 1940s. He eventually changed his mind.

“How wrong was I?” said Simon, whose HBO miniseries debuted in March. “The piece is incredibly relevant.”

In “Vida,” which returned to Starz for a third season in April, the Mexican American characters in an LA neighborho­od confront U.S. Immigratio­n and Customs Enforcemen­t. In Freeform’s reboot of “Party of Five,” the kids’ parents get deported, rather than die in a car accident as in the original run.

“Coyote,” set to debut on Paramount Network this year, is seen through the eyes of a conflicted border patrol agent. But star Michael Chiklis insists the drama was never designed to make a statement.

“We’re not going to proselytiz­e. We’re not going to preach to you,” said Chiklis. “We’re just going to tell stories with all different points of view. It isn’t about this side or that side. It’s about people.”

The creators of “Little America,” an anthology series on Apple TV+ that shares a different immigrant’s story in every episode, are also wary of being perceived as a show with a liberal agenda.

“If you make it overly political, you’re taking the focus away from the people whose stories you’re trying to tell,” said executive producer Kumail Nanjiani, best known for “Silicon Valley” and “The Big Sick.” “But there are certain people who are going to see it as some radical political statement, and there’s nothing we can do about that.”

Still, the very fact that immigrants are taking center stage is a kind of statement, one that’s decades in the making.

Comedian Hari Kondabolu, who is featured in PBS’ “Asian Americans,” said all the pestering and protesting is starting to pay off.

“The reason it’s happening now is a result of us fighting,” said Kondabolu, who wrote and starred in “The Trouble With Apu,” the 2017 documentar­y that persuaded Hank Azaria to stop doing the voice of the only Indian American regular on “The Simpsons.” “There were all those years of people saying, ‘Oh, that’s just one of those whiny organizati­ons that represents some minority group saying they don’t like this portrayal’ or ‘Oh, there’s another academic paper on this.’

“Well, all those little jabs, they finally turned into a movement that helped shape what we see today.”

When Amy Lippman decided to resurrect “Party of Five,” she made sure her staff reflected diversity. “I don’t think I realized until I got into the writers’ room with people who had very different life experience­s than my own what value there was in having those voices in the room,” she said. “One of the greatest compliment­s I got was from a director who said he had never heard so much Spanish being spoken on a set.”

Despite mostly positive reviews, “Party” will not be returning for a second season. “Vida” has also not been renewed. But there is a great deal of optimism, especially with the rise of streaming services that are thirsty for fresh perspectiv­es.

 ?? LARA SOLANKI/NETFLIX ?? Poorna Jagannatha­n, left, and Maitreyi Ramakrishn­an, center, star in Netflix’s “Never Have I Ever.” Ramakrishn­an portrays Devi, an Indian American teenager who grumbles about wearing a sari but prays to the Hindu gods.
LARA SOLANKI/NETFLIX Poorna Jagannatha­n, left, and Maitreyi Ramakrishn­an, center, star in Netflix’s “Never Have I Ever.” Ramakrishn­an portrays Devi, an Indian American teenager who grumbles about wearing a sari but prays to the Hindu gods.

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